Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Breaking resolution­s

- OUT AND ABOUT NICK V. QUIJANO JR. Email: nevqjr@yahoo.com.ph

Best wishes on surviving New Year’s Eve.

By surviving, you’re now a jolly habitué of 2023.

Still, I hope you aren’t sorry about paying riotous compliment­s “both to the old year that has rolled away, and to the New Year that is just beginning to dawn upon us, to see the old fellow out, and the new one in, with gaiety and glee.”

Regretting partying is unfounded.

As humane George Orwell once wrote on committing excesses during a once-a-year outbreak such as New Year’s Eve: “One may decide, with full knowledge of what one is doing, that an occasional good time is worth the damage it inflicts on one’s liver. For health is not the only thing that matters: Friendship, hospitalit­y, and the heightened spirits and change of outlook that one gets by eating and drinking in good company are also valuable… The whole experience, including the repentance afterwards, makes a sort of break in one’s mental routine, comparable to a weekend in a

foreign country,

“Some slack then on your supposedly robust but stressful resolution­s is the key to successful­ly fulfilling resolution­s.

which is probably beneficial.”

But, as you now reflect in cheerful recollecti­on of last night’s revelries as well as giving heartfelt thankfulne­ss to other cheery occurrence­s in the past year, one should also justly credit the confidence the New Year brings.

Until, of course, the year proves unworthy of our confidence, particular­ly after it messes up our New Year’s resolution­s.

Making resolution­s, of course, is the sprezzatur­a — the art of being seemingly natural, and spontaneou­s — an activity that opens the year.

But before committing resolution­s to paper or the digital realm, scribble or type 2023 a hundred times or more to cultivate hand muscle memory.

Frequently mislabelin­g 2022 for 2023 is a bane for the time being. But getting the right year early saves a heap of trouble. For want of a right year, many a conspiracy theory was birthed.

Anyway, while your private commitment­s to spiritual, moral, health, and other practical virtues are of great import, far more interestin­g isn’t that you made them but the ways you’ll find to break them.

The proverbial cliché that one’s vows to better oneself are made and then planned, much like premeditat­ed murder, to be broken is a frustratin­g paradox: It implies a weakness of will.

“Akrasia” is the ancient Greek word for such a predicamen­t, which also broadly implies losing control of oneself.

Losing control, however, as philosophe­r J.L. Austin pointed out, is strange since whenever we succumb to the temptation to break New Year resolution­s

“Making resolution­s, of course, is the sprezzatur­a — the art of being seemingly natural, and spontaneou­s — an activity that opens the year.

we do so calmly and with finesse.

So much so, as philosophy professor John Kaag puts it, “eventually they’re in such shambles that they can’t really be called resolution­s at all, just guiding principles or fond memories.”

Modern psychology, however, rescues us, recently finding we can in fact go easy on our supposedly rigid resolution­s.

Historian Cody Delastry, writing for Aeon Magazine, reports that according to human decision-making processes researcher Rita Coelho do Vale, it is better to make our plans fail intermitte­ntly.

Splurging, therefore, on occasional luxuries like a sumptuous buffet while trying to shed weight is better than “end up failing anyway and getting so demoralize­d you give up your goal altogether.”

Do Vale tells Delastry, taking a break is an everyday thing: “We all plan for breaks during the day — coffee, a nap — and we know that we will feel better after these rests.

But with goals we simply don’t think like this.”

Some slack then on your supposedly robust but stressful resolution­s is the key to successful­ly fulfilling resolution­s.

Pay mind furthermor­e to the axiom that willpower is a finite resource. One only has so much willpower to use before one eventually needs to take a break to replenish it.

On balance then, the lesson is flexibilit­y. Life hands us partly defined problems needing only moderately accurate solutions. Cheers.

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